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Review
. 2019 Sep 15:5:247-268.
doi: 10.1146/annurev-vision-091718-015000. Epub 2019 Jul 12.

Role of the Vermal Cerebellum in Visually Guided Eye Movements and Visual Motion Perception

Affiliations
Review

Role of the Vermal Cerebellum in Visually Guided Eye Movements and Visual Motion Perception

Peter Thier et al. Annu Rev Vis Sci. .

Abstract

The cerebellar cortex is a crystal-like structure consisting of an almost endless repetition of a canonical microcircuit that applies the same computational principle to different inputs. The output of this transformation is broadcasted to extracerebellar structures by way of the deep cerebellar nuclei. Visually guided eye movements are accommodated by different parts of the cerebellum. This review primarily discusses the role of the oculomotor part of the vermal cerebellum [the oculomotor vermis (OMV)] in the control of visually guided saccades and smooth-pursuit eye movements. Both types of eye movements require the mapping of retinal information onto motor vectors, a transformation that is optimized by the OMV, considering information on past performance. Unlike the role of the OMV in the guidance of eye movements, the contribution of the adjoining vermal cortex to visual motion perception is nonmotor and involves a cerebellar influence on information processing in the cerebral cortex.

Keywords: complex spike; oculomotor vermis; saccade; simple spike; smooth-pursuit; visual motion perception.

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